50-41
50
Blue Moon
Ethan Hawke plays with campy brilliance and criminal combover the lyricist Lorenz Hart as he spirals into vinegary jilted despair after his split from Richard Rodgers in this latest collaboration with Richard Linklater. Read the full review.
49
Happyend
Teen romance and paranoid surveillance collide to dysfunctional effect in Neo Sora’s beguiling debut feature set in an oppressive near-future Japan. Read the full review.
48
I Swear
Kirk Jones’s moving film of John Davidson, the man who taught Britain about Tourette, offers compassion and catharsis. Read the full review.
47
Lurker
A desperate wannabe attaches himself to a singer on the rise in a darkly compelling Hollywood melodrama. Read the full review.
46
Homebound
An emotionally rich study of friends in rural India trying to get home in the pandemic, Neeraj Ghaywan’s film benefits from excellent lead performances and strong cinematography. Read the full review.
45
The Librarians
Kim A Snyder’s documentary highlights the defenders of young readers’ rights to see their lives in print facing rightwing attacks. Read the full review.
44
Motherboard
Victoria Mapplebeck’s documentary stitches 20 years’ worth of footage into a home video love letter to her son, whose whole life so far is observed. Read the full review.
43
The Kingdom
Corsica-set mafia tale boasts outstanding performances from first-time actors as it follows a teenage girl discovering and revelling in her status as the blueblood daughter of a crime boss. Read the full review.
42
Bugonia
Possible alien Emma Stone stars in Yorgos Lanthimos’s macabre conspiracy theory comedy co-starring a superb Jesse Plemons. Read the full review.
41
Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore
A compelling portrait of deaf actor and campaigner Marlee Matlin’s life reveals she achieved much more than her widely lauded 1980s Oscar win. Read the full review.
40-31
40
Sorry, Baby
In their feature debut, writer-director Eva Victor depicts the aftermath of sexual assault with striking naturalism and surprising grace. Read the full review.
39
Misericordia
A man moves in with his employer’s widow in this playful but dreamlike and inscrutable drama from Alain Guiraudie, the director of Stranger By the Lake. Read the full review.
38
Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
Daniel Craig is joined by a sparkling array of talent including Josh O’Connor, Glenn Close and Josh Brolin in this latest murder mystery with a religious undercurrent. Read the full review.
37
Souleymane’s Story
Abou Sangaré is magnificent in a story that shines a light on the enforced invisibility of economic migrants in the margins of Paris. Read the full review.
36
Dying
Lars Eidinger plays the conductor embarking on a major orchestral project, but whose professional status is threatened by family turmoil behind the scenes. Read the full review.
35
Toxic
Saulė Bliuvaitė’s debut feature follows two Lithuanian teens seduced by a “modelling school” promising to take them away from their tough home town. Read the full review.
34
From Ground Zero: Stories From Gaza
This heartbreaking collection of short films mentions neither Israel nor Hamas, instead offering a mosaic of everyday life under nonstop attack. Read the full review.
33
The Brutalist
In an Oscar-winning performance, Adrien Brody plays a Hungarian architect and Holocaust survivor who comes to the US and begins a distinguished career under the patronage of a wealthy man. Read the full review.
32
Gazer
A fascinatingly uneasy debut from Ryan J Sloan has hints of Lynch and Cronenberg with star and co-writer Ariella Mastroianni radiating suppressed anguish and rage. Read the full review.
31
The Rule of Jenny Pen
Geoffrey Rush’s retired judge is terrorised by John Lithgow’s therapy puppet-wielding fellow resident in this claustrophobic tale of elder-on-elder abuse. Read the full review.
30-21 coming soon
The 50 best films of 2025 were voted for by Peter Bradshaw, Catherine Bray, Xan Brooks, Luke Buckmaster, Sian Cain, Cath Clarke, Leslie Felperin, Ryan Gilbey, Jesse Hassenger, Phil Hoad, Adrian Horton, Richard Lawson, Ann Lee, Benjamin Lee, Rebecca Liu, Mike McCahill, Gwilym Mumford, Philip Oltermann, Andrew Pulver, Steve Rose and Catherine Shoard
